An electric motor is configured with a stator core assembly that includes a stator core having a plurality of winding slots. A plurality of stator windings pass through the plurality of winding slots that include slot liners configured to provide electrostatic shields surrounding the plurality of stator windings. The electrostatic shields are referenced to an electrical location to reduce common mode currents associated with the electric motor.
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27. An electric motor configured with a plurality of stator slot liners, each slot liner configured to provide an electrostatic shield at least partially surrounding a corresponding stator slot winding, wherein each of the plurality of electrostatic shields is devoid of any insulation on the inner surface and comprises only one layer of insulation and is electrically insulated from the stator core by the only one layer of insulation and further wherein the plurality of electrostatic shields are connected together in parallel via an interconnecting wire or conductive ring, and referenced directly to a return node of an electrical inverter that is different from ground via a common mode current return path to reduce common mode currents associated with the electric motor, wherein one end of each of the plurality of electrostatic shields overlaps the other end and further wherein the electric motor further comprises one or more motor winding power lead wires and a common mode inductor surrounding both the one or more motor winding power lead wires and the common mode current return path connected to the interconnecting wire or conductive ring.
1. An electric motor comprising:
one or more motor winding power lead wires;
a stator core comprising a plurality of winding slots;
a plurality of slot liners, each slot liner disposed at least partially within a corresponding winding slot, wherein each slot liner comprises an electrically conductive layer devoid of any insulation on the inner surface and only one layer of insulation, the electrically conductive layer electrically insulated from the stator core by the only one layer of insulation, and further wherein the plurality of conductive layers are electrically connected together in parallel via an interconnecting wire or conductive ring, to provide a common connection point, wherein one end of each of the plurality of conductive layers overlaps the other end and further wherein the interconnecting wire or conductive ring is connected directly to a return node of an electrical inverter that is different from ground via a common mode current return path; and
a common mode inductor around both the one or more motor winding power lead wires and the common mode current return path connected to the interconnecting wire or conductive ring.
20. An electric motor comprising:
one or more motor winding power lead wires;
a stator core comprising a plurality of winding slots;
a plurality of stator windings passing through the plurality of winding slots; and
a plurality of stator slot liners, each slot liner configured to provide an electrostatic shield at least partially surrounding a corresponding stator slot winding, wherein each of the plurality of electrostatic shields is devoid of any insulation on the inner surface and comprises only one layer of insulation and is electrically insulated from the stator core by the only one layer of insulation and further wherein the plurality of electrostatic shields are connected together in parallel via an interconnecting wire or conductive ring, to provide a common connection point, and further wherein the interconnecting wire or conductive ring is connected directly to a return node of an electrical inverter that is different from ground via a common mode current return path wherein one end of each of the plurality of electrostatic shields overlaps the other end; and
a common mode inductor around both the one or more motor winding power lead wires and the common mode current return path connected to the interconnecting wire or conductive ring.
11. An electric motor comprising:
one or more motor winding power lead wires;
a stator core comprising a plurality of winding slots;
a plurality of stator windings passing through the plurality of winding slots;
a plurality of slot liners, each slot liner comprising an electrically conductive layer disposed between a corresponding stator winding and the stator core, each conductive layer devoid of any insulation on the inner surface and comprising only one layer of insulation, the electrically conductive layer electrically insulated from its corresponding stator winding and the stator core by the only one layer of insulation, wherein the plurality of conductive layers are electrically connected together in parallel via an interconnecting wire or conductive ring, to provide a common connection point, wherein one end of each of the plurality of conductive layers overlaps the other end and further wherein the interconnecting wire or conductive ring is connected directly to a return node of an electrical inverter that is different from ground via a common mode current return path; and
a common mode inductor around both the one or more motor winding power lead wires and the common mode current return path connected to the interconnecting wire or conductive ring.
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The present invention is directed to electric motors, and more particularly to a structure for an electric motor that makes the electric motor more immune to creating electro-magnetic interference (EMI).
The stator of an electric motor 12 is energized by a switching inverter 10 such as depicted in
Current flowing in these capacitive paths causes two major problems. These problems are associated with EMI as well as excessive bearing currents. If for example, the inverter 10 is connected to a 250 VDC link, and the semiconductor switches turn on and off in 50 nsec, the dv/dt will be 5×109 V/sec. Typical stator winding to ground capacitance is about one (1) to about ten (10) nF. Thus, assuming 2 nF of capacitance, 10 A of peak current will be flowing through this path. This is a substantial amount of common-mode current; and it requires very large, expensive, heavy common-mode filters to attenuate this current. Current that flows through the Cwr path will flow to ground through the rotor bearings. This current can cause degradation of the bearings.
In view of the foregoing, it would be advantageous and beneficial to provide a motor structure that reduces EMI problems as well as common-mode currents that flow into the rotor bearings and electrical ground structures generally associated with conventional electric motor structures.
The present invention is directed to an electric motor structure. According to one embodiment, an electric motor comprises:
According to another embodiment, an electric motor comprises:
According to yet another embodiment, an electric motor comprises:
Still another embodiment comprises an electric motor configured with a plurality of stator slot liners, each slot liner configured to provide an electrostatic shield at least partially surrounding a corresponding stator winding, wherein the plurality of electrostatic shields are connected together in parallel and referenced to an electrical location to reduce common mode currents associated with the electric motor.
Other aspects and features of the present invention and many of the attendant advantages of the present invention will be readily appreciated as the same become better understood by reference to the following detailed description when considered in connection with the accompanying drawings in which like reference numerals designate like parts throughout the figures thereof and wherein:
While the above-identified drawing figures set forth alternative embodiments, other embodiments of the present invention are also contemplated, as noted in the discussion. In all cases, this disclosure presents illustrated embodiments of the present invention by way of representation and not limitation. Numerous other modifications and embodiments can be devised by those skilled in the art which fall within the scope and spirit of the principles of this invention.
More specifically, the electrostatic shield 52 provided via stator slot liner 50 allows problematic common-mode currents to instead flow to a much better electrical path, thus greatly reducing the associated EMI problems. This approach also reduces the common-mode currents that would flow into the bearings of the motor and cause bearing failures. The electrostatic shield provided by each slot liner 50 advantageously prevents capacitive currents from flowing into the ground structure and creating common-mode EMI currents, and also prevents capacitive currents from flowing into the bearing assembly and causing bearing fluting and pitting problems, thus leading to increased motor bearing life. According to one aspect, the capacitive common-mode current is redirected to flow directly back to the inverter 10 instead of ground. In this way, any required common-mode filter is smaller, and the system is much less prone to unintentional electromagnetic radiation.
According to another embodiment, stator slot liner 50 comprises an electrostatic shield 52 and only one layer of insulation material. The single layer of insulation material may consist of layer 54 or layer 56. In this embodiment, the surface of the electrostatic shield 52 that is devoid of any insulation material relies on the winding insulation itself to provide the requisite insulation between the electrostatic shield and any corresponding windings. Insulation layers 54, 56 may each have a thickness between about 0.001 inch and about 0.05 inch according to one embodiment.
Stator slot liner 50 may comprise an electrostatic shield 52 and only one layer of insulation material, as stated herein. The single layer of insulation material may consist of only layer 56 for the embodiment depicted in
Slot liner 50 is then used in place of a traditional stator slot liner (such as nomex). Each stator slot liner 50 behaves in a fashion similar to a Faraday shield; and the windings 42 in each slot 22 exhibit a capacitance to the conducting layer, e.g. copper foil, of the corresponding slot liner 50.
According to one aspect, a slot liner 50 is placed inside each stator slot 22. The motor windings 42 are then positioned inside the shielded slot liners 50 in a fashion similar to that employed when installing traditional insulating slot liner windings. During assembly of the stator lamination stackup assembly 30, one side of each slot liner 50 is electrically connected in common with one side of each of the remaining slot liners 50 such that the plurality of slot liners 50 are electrically connected in parallel with one another. According to one aspect, these connections may be implemented using electrical wires. According to another aspect, these connections may be implemented using a conductive ring assembly. Subsequent to connecting the slot liners 50 together, the shielded slot liners 50 are referenced to an electrical location where the C*dv/dt currents can flow into a better electrical path, such as the return node 124 of an electrical inverter 126 driving the motor 128 such as described in further detail herein with reference to
According to one aspect, the purpose of the caps 80, 90 is to capture the capacitive currents, and redirect them to a better electrical path. According to one embodiment, the stator assembly 40 depicted in
Each end cap 80, 90 may comprise a corresponding hole 82, 92 in the center of the respective cap to accommodate the rotor shaft of the motor 12 depicted in
In summary explanation, an electric motor structure has been described that reduces common-mode currents and that reduces motor bearing currents. The reduced currents advantageously result in reduced filter requirements and increased motor bearing life. Thus, the need for large, heavy electromagnetic common-mode filters is greatly reduced. According to one aspect, use of thin insulated copper foil advantageously reduces motor assembly cost, and provides a motor assembly that is reliable and electrically robust from electrical transients, and that further is simple and compatible with existing motor assembly approaches. The embodied motor structures advantageously reduce bearing currents without the need for expensive ceramic bearings, or the use of electrical rotating brushes to shunt capacitive currents to eliminate undesired current flow through the metallic motor bearings. The embodied motor structures further greatly reduce EMI complexity by redirecting stator winding capacitive currents into an electrical shield assembly, allowing these currents to be directed to a more desirable electrical path.
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The embodiments described herein importantly do not interconnect the electrostatic shields/conductive layers 52 directly to a common motor ground location such as, for example, the motor stator core. Instead, the plurality of conductive layers 52 are electrically connected together in parallel via an interconnecting wire or conductive ring, to provide a common connection point that can be referenced to an electrical location such as a return path/node to a motor inverter, to reduce common mode currents associated with the electric motor. The present inventors discovered that connecting the electrostatic shields 52 to a motor ground location such as a stator core or other motor ground location, results in disadvantageously increasing common mode currents associated with the electric motor.
While the invention has been described with reference to a preferred embodiment, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes may be made and equivalents may be substituted for elements thereof without departing from the scope of the invention. In addition, many modifications may be made to adapt a particular situation or material to the teachings of the invention without departing from the essential scope thereof. Therefore, it is intended that the invention not be limited to the particular embodiment disclosed as the best mode contemplated for carrying out this invention, but that the invention will include all embodiments falling within the scope of the appended claims.
Shah, Manoj Ramprasad, Schutten, Michael Joseph, Thomas, Robert James, Prabhakaran, Satish
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Executed on | Assignor | Assignee | Conveyance | Frame | Reel | Doc |
Dec 22 2010 | SCHUTTEN, MICHAEL JOSEPH | General Electric Company | ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS | 025630 | /0571 | |
Dec 22 2010 | THOMAS, ROBERT JAMES | General Electric Company | ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS | 025630 | /0571 | |
Dec 23 2010 | General Electric Company | (assignment on the face of the patent) | / | |||
Dec 28 2010 | SHAH, MANOJ RAMPRASAD | General Electric Company | ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS | 025630 | /0571 | |
Jan 05 2011 | PRABHAKARAN, SATISH | General Electric Company | ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS | 025630 | /0571 |
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